Our Courses

Company Secretary (CS)

“Three levels of Examination to be cleared to qualify as a Company Secretary. Passing criteria is minimum of 50% aggregate marks and 40 % individual subject marks at all levels of examination.”

CS-Executive Entrance Test (CS-EET)

Subjects covered in CS EET Course

Paper 1: Business Communication (50 Marks)

Paper 2: Legal Aptitude & Logical reasoning (50 marks)

Paper 3: Economic & Business Environment (50 Marks)

Paper 4: Current Affairs, Presentation & Communication Skills (50 Marks)

CS Executive

Subjects covered in CS Executive Course 

Module I:

Paper 1: Jurisprudence, Interpretation & General Laws (100 Marks)

Paper 2: Company Law (100 Marks)

Paper 3: Setting up of Business Entities and Closure (100 Marks)

Paper 4: Tax Laws (100 Marks)

Module II:

Paper 1: Corporate & Management Accounting (100 Marks)

Paper 2: Securities Laws & Capital Markets (100 Marks)

Paper 3: Economic, Business and Commercial Laws (100 Marks)

Paper 4: Financial and Strategic Management (100 Marks)

 

CS Professional

Subjects covered in CS Professional Course 

Module - I

Paper 1: Governance, Risk Management, Compliances and Ethics (100 Marks)

Paper 2: Advanced Tax Laws (100 Marks)

Paper 3: Drafting, Pleadings and Appearances (100 Marks)

Module - II

Paper 1: Secretarial Audit, Compliance Management and Due Diligence (100 Marks)

Paper 2: Corporate Restructuring, Insolvency, Liquidation & Winding-up (100 Marks)

Paper 3: Resolution of Corporate Disputes, Non-Compliances & Remedies (100 Marks)

Module - III

Paper 1: Corporate Funding & Listings in Stock Exchanges (100 Marks)

Paper 2: Multidisciplinary Case Studies (100 Marks) 

(The examination for this paper will be open book examination)

Paper 3: Electives (1 paper out of below 8 papers) (100 Marks)

  • Banking – Law & Practice
  • Insurance– Law & Practice
  • Intellectual Property Rights– Laws and Practices
  • Forensic Audit
  • Direct Tax Law & Practice
  • Labour Laws & Practice
  • Valuations & Business Modelling
  • Insolvency – Law and Practice